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Friday, March 22, 2013

IMA HOGG, FIRST LADY OF TEXAS

This month--as you can see at the top of the sidebar--is Women's History Month. Our writers here at Sweethearts of the West have been featuring a famous women of the West. I'm choosing to repost an article I wrote about a Texas woman, Ima Hogg.

Ima
Hogg, philanthropist and patron of the arts, was born to Sarah Ann (Stinson)
and Governor James Stephen Hogg in Mineola, Texas, on July 10, 1882. When she
arrived, her father said, “"Our cup of joy is now overflowing! We have a
daughter of as fine proportions and of as angelic mien as ever gracious nature
favor a man with, and her name is Ima!"

Miss Ima as a toddler

Why, you may ask, would a man who loved his family and adored his
daughter choose that name in combination with Hogg? Ima was named for the
heroine of a Civil War poem written by her uncle Thomas Elisha and was
affectionately known as Miss Ima for most of her long life.

Ima
Hogg later recounted that "my grandfather Stinson lived fifteen miles from
Mineola and news traveled slowly. When he learned of his granddaughter's name
he came trotting to town as fast as he could to protest but it was too late.
The christening had taken place, and Ima I was to remain."

During
her childhood, Hogg's elder brother William often came home from school with a
bloody nose, the result of defending, as she later recalled, "my good
name". Throughout her adult years, Hogg signed her name in a scrawl that
left her first name illegible. Her personal stationery was usually printed
"Miss Hogg" or "I. Hogg", and she often had her stationery
order placed in her secretary's name to avoid questions. Hogg did not use a
nickname until several months before her death, when she began calling herself
"Imogene". Her last passport was issued to "Ima Imogene
Hogg". The story that she had a sister named Ura is untrue, although I
heard it all my life.

Ima as a young woman

Ima
had three brothers, William Clifford Hogg, born in 1875; Michael, born in 1885;
and Thomas Elisha Hogg, born in 1887. Ima and her brothers were born into a
family whose tradition of public service was an integral part of Texas history.
Her grandfather, Joseph Lewis Hogg, took the oath of allegiance to the Republic
of Texas in 1839, helped write the Texas Constitution, fought in the Mexican
War, and served as a brigadier general in the Confederate Army during the Civil
War. Her father was the first native born governor and was elected in 1890.

She
was eight years old when her father was elected governor; she spent much of her
early life in Austin. After her mother died of tuberculosis in 1895, Ima
attended the Coronal Institute in San Marcos, and in 1899 she entered the
University of Texas. In 1901 Ima, who had played the piano since the age of
three, went to New York to study music. Her father died in 1906. From 1907 to 1909
she continued her music studies in Berlin and Vienna.

In
1910, Ima moved to Houston, where she helped found the Houston Symphony
Orchestra, which played its first concert in June 1913. She served as the first
vice president of the Houston Symphony Society and became president in 1917.
She became ill in late 1918 and spent the next two years in Philadelphia under
the care of a specialist in mental and nervous disorders. She did not return to
Houston to live until 1923.

Miss Ima's portrait

After
their father’s death in 1906, Ima and her brothers tried to sell the Varner
plantation, but a provision in his will specified that the land be kept for 15
years. On January 15, 1918, oil was found on the Varner plantation. A second
strike the following year provided oil income amounting to $225,000 a month
shared among the four siblings. That’s a lot of money now, but imagine what a
sum that was in 1919! According to Ima’s biographer Gwendolyn Cone Neely, the
Hoggs did not believe that the oil money was rightfully theirs, as it had come
from the land and not hard work, and they were determined to use it for the
good of Texas.

In
spite of her personal health problems, or perhaps because of them, Ima Hogg
founded the Houston Child Guidance Center in 1929 to provide counseling for
disturbed children and their families. Ima was convinced that if children's
emotional and mental problems were treated, more serious illness could be
prevented in adults. Her interest in mental health came from her father, who
had read widely on mental health issues; during his terms as governor, Ima had
often accompanied him on visits to state institutions, including charity
hospitals and asylums for the mentally ill. She furthered her knowledge of the
field while she was a student at UT, taking several courses in psychology. Ima
was convinced that her youngest brother, Tom, would have benefited from similar
intervention, as he had reacted badly after their mother's death and as an
adult was "restless, impulsive, and alarmingly careless with money".
Although her ideas on mental health would be considered mainstream today, in
1929 they were pioneering. In 1972, she told a reporter for the Houston
Chronicle that, of all her activities, she had derived most pleasure from her
role in establishing the Houston Child Guidance Center.

She
joined her elder brother William on a vacation in Germany in 1930. During their
visit, he suffered a gallbladder attack and died on September 12, 1930 after
emergency surgery. Ima brought her brother's body back to the United States. His
will bequeathed $2.5 million to UT and his desire was that it be used alongside
money donated by his sister for far-reaching benefit to the people of Texas.
Legal challenges tied up the grant until 1939, when the University received
$1.8 million. In 1940, after discussion with her brother Michael—the executor
of the will—Ima used the money to establish the Hogg Foundation for Mental
Health at the University of Texas at Austin.

In
1943, Ima Hogg decided to run for a seat on the Houston School Board so that
the board would include two female members. During her term, she worked to
remove gender and race as criteria for determining pay. She championed a
visiting teacher program for children with emotional problems and began art
education programs in the schools for black students.

Varner Plantation at Bayou Bend

Although
Ima Hogg spent little time at the Varner Plantation after Bayou Bend was
constructed, she continued to purchase art and antique furniture on its behalf.
In the 1950s, she restored the plantation, and each room was given a different
theme from Texas history: colonial times, the Confederacy, Napoleonic times
(1818), and the Mexican–American War. One room was dedicated to her father, and
contained his desk and chair as well as his collection of walking sticks. She
donated the property to the state, and it was dedicated as the Varner–Hogg
Plantation State Historical Site in 1958, the 107th anniversary of Jim Hogg's
birth.

Ima
Hogg donated works she inherited from her brothers to Houston's Museum of Fine
Arts, including one of the limited editions of Bronco Buster by Frederic
Remington. In the 1920s, Hogg's brothers began to develop a new elite
neighborhood, which they called River Oaks, on the outskirts of Houston. For
their home, the Hoggs chose the largest lot, 14.5 acres. Ima worked closely
with architect John Staub to design a house that would show off the art the
family had purchased. William and Ima moved into the house, which she
christened Bayou Bend, in 1928. In 1939, when she restored her estate along
American lines, she donated more than 100 works on paper to Houston's Museum of
Fine Arts (MFAH), including works by Cézanne, Sargent, Picasso, and Klee.
Following the death of her brother Michael in 1941, she donated his collection
of Frederic Remington works to the museum. Consisting of 53 oil paintings, 10
watercolors, and one bronze, it is known as the Hogg Brothers Collection, and
is called "one of the most important groupings of Western paintings on
display in an American museum. " Ima donated her collection of Native
American art to MFAH in 1944, including 168 pieces of pottery, 95 pieces of
jewelry, and 81 paintings.

In
1960, she was appointed by President Eisenhower to serve on a committee to plan
the National Cultural Center, now called the Kennedy Center, in Washington,
D.C. In 1961, Jacqueline Kennedy named Hogg to the 18-member advisory committee
to work with the Fine Arts Committee in seeking historical furniture for the
White House.

One
morning in 1914, Ima was awakened by a burglar in her bedroom. She confronted
the man, who was attempting to steal her jewelry. Not only did she convince him
to return the jewelry, but wrote down a name and address, handed it to him and
told him to go there that very day to get a job. When asked why she did that,
Ima responded, "He didn't look like a bad man."

Later
that year, she sailed to Germany, alone. While she was en route, Archduke Franz
Ferdinand of Austria was assassinated, and the day before she arrived, Britain
declared war on Germany. The United States was still neutral, however, so Hogg
continued her tour of Europe, not leaving until several months later.

Though
Ima Hogg has been described as a woman of "unfailing politeness", she
was not without adversaries. For instance, at a concert arranged by the Houston
Symphony for her 90th birthday featuring the elderly pianist Arthur Rubinstein,
he characterized her as a "tiresome old woman". Hogg, in turn,
regarded the musician as "a pompous old man". By contrast, Hogg said
of Vladimir Horowitz, whom she met backstage at a 1975 concert in Houston,
"Such a nice man. Not at all like that Mr. Rubinstein."

Ima
Hogg was a generous benefactor, and believed that "inherited money was a
public trust". She was described by the University of Houston as
"compassionate by nature", "progressive in outlook",
"concerned with the welfare of all Texans", a "zealous proponent
of mental health care" and "committed to public education".

A
lifelong Democrat, Ima Hogg died on August 19, 1975, at the age of 93, from a
heart attack resulting from atheroma. She had been vacationing in London at the
time, but fell as she was getting into a taxi, and died a few days later in a
London hospital. An autopsy report revealed that her death was not related to
the earlier fall. On receiving news of her death, the University of Texas
declared two days of mourning and flew the flag at half-staff.

Miss Ima in later years

She
received too many awards and honors to list. In 1963, former Governor of Texas
Allan Shivers—when presenting Hogg with the Distinguished Alumnus Award of the
University of Texas Ex-Students Association (the first woman so honored)—said
of "Miss Ima":